The Assimilation of Vietnamese People

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The Assimilation of Vietnamese People

The Vietnamese people have been assimilated into the Australian

society. They have been absorbed and adopted to the Australian

Culture, by learning and socialising from others. Especially the new

generations which have grown up in Australia.

(b) List the ways of how this was achieved

· Socialising in cultural pattern to of the host country.

· Intermarriage between the immigrant group and the core society.

· Denying native country.

· The change of the immigrant’s cultural pattern to that of the host

society. Involving the change in ethnic values, customs and cultural

forms.

Research

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2. What is assimilation?

Assimilation, the process by which individuals or groups are absorbed

into and adopt the dominant culture and society of another group. The

term assimilation is generally used with regard to immigrants to a new

land. New customs and attitudes are acquired through contact and

communication with indigenous inhabitants. However, the transfer of

customs is not simply a one-way process. Each group of immigrants

contributes some of its own cultural traits to its new society.

Assimilation usually involves a gradual change and takes place in

varying degrees; full assimilation occurs when new members of a

society become indistinguishable from older members.

3. Find two other examples where other races/cultures have been

assimilated?

Aboriginal Assimilation

Assimilation came about during the post war years in Australia where

the Aborigines were expected to live like White Australians do.

In 1951 assimilation was adopted as the Commonwealth Government

policy. To facilitate the process, all Aboriginal people in the

Northern Territory were declared "wards" under the welfare ordinance

of 1953, which gave the Government legal rights over their movements,

employment, residence, wages and even who they married. A network of

government settlements was established to which any wandering "bush"

groups were to be removed and where they were to be educated in the

ways of mainstream society.

By the late 1960's, however, the assimilation policy was increasingly

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